Ann Harding (
August 7, 
1901 - 
September 1, 
1981) was an American actress.  Born 
Dorothy Walton Gatley in 
Fort Sam Houston, Texas, the daughter of a career army officer, she traveled often during her early life.  The family finally settled in 
New York, and young Dorothy attended 
Bryn Mawr College.  Following school, she got a job as a script reader, and began acting on 
Broadway.  In 
1929 she made her film debut in 
Paris Bound[?], opposite 
Fredric March.  In 
1931 she was nominated for the 
Academy Award for Best Actress for 
Holiday.
Harding became stereotyped as the innocent young woman willing to sacrifice herself for others, and she eventually quit making movies when she married in 1937, although she was lured back in 1942 to make Eyes in the Night[?].  In 1956 she again starred with March in The Man in the Gray Flannel Suit[?].
 
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